Financial Illiteracy or Political Spin? Thomas Isaac Draws Flak Over Misleading Claims on ₹13,220 Cr Adani-MSC Vizhinjam Deal

By South India Pulse 3 Min Read

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: Former Kerala Finance Minister Dr. Thomas Isaac has found himself at the center of a major controversy following his statements on the landmark ₹13,220 crore investment by the Switzerland-based Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC) into Adani Vizhinjam Port Private Limited (AVPPL).

​Isaac took to social media claiming that Gautam Adani is “pocketing” ₹13,000 crore by selling a 49% stake in a project where Adani initially invested only ₹2,497 crore. However, financial experts, corporate lawyers, and market observers have heavily criticized the former minister, pointing out that his analysis betrays a fundamental ignorance of corporate finance and investment structures.

Capital Infusion vs. Secondary Sale: The Core Reality
​Experts have clarified that the strategic partnership between Adani Ports (APSEZ) and MSC’s terminal arm, Terminal Investment Limited (TiL), is not a ‘Secondary Sale’ where an existing promoter cashes out. Instead, it is a primary Equity Infusion (Preferential Offer).

The ₹13,220 crore being invested by MSC will go directly into the balance sheet of AVPPL to fund the mega expansion of the Vizhinjam Port, aiming to scale up its capacity 3.5 times to 5.7 million TEUs by December 2028. It is capital meant for infrastructure development, not a payout to Gautam Adani’s personal pocket.

Strict Regulatory Framework and State Overwatch
​Furthermore, under the concessionaire agreement signed under the public-private partnership (PPP) model, Adani cannot quietly engineer a stake transfer. The deal strictly requires:
​Board Approval: Prior consent from the Directorate Board, which includes representatives from the Kerala Government.
​Statutory Clearances: Since it involves major Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in a strategic coastal asset, mandatory approvals from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), central regulatory authorities, and national security clearances are strictly required.

Chief Minister V.D. Satheesan also confirmed in the State Assembly that no ownership or stake transfer can materialize without the formal node of the state government.

Critics point out that for someone who served as the state’s Finance Minister for multiple terms, confusing a primary capital expansion with a secondary promoter offloading is either a case of absolute financial illiteracy or a deliberate attempt to mislead the public for political mileage.

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